Major shifts in consumer sentiment defined 2025’s art market. Tariff turmoil and gallery closures roiled the U.S., while last fall’s blockbuster auction records and buoyant art weeks suggested a comeback. In spite of both industry and economic headwinds, many market professionals ended the year with a dose of optimism. 2026 looks to build on that tentative momentum.
The global economic picture mirrors this art market fragility. The IMF has global growth rates pegged at 3.1% (up from 2.6% in 2025), and inflation is expected to fall to around 3.5–3.7%. This could have a ripple effect on lowering interest rates in advanced economies, easing the cost of borrowing and, potentially, spending on art.
Here, we share five key art market themes to watch in 2026.
1. A momentous year for the Middle East
One region is on art aficionados’ lips this year: the Middle East.
2026 will be a watershed moment for the region’s market, driven by a convergence of major institutional openings and a significant expansion of the regional art fair circuit.
A primary catalyst is the opening of the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi in June. The Frank Gehry–designed building will be the Guggenheim’s largest facility yet and is set to anchor the region as a global capital for modern and contemporary art. It joins a slate of other recent significant museum openings in the region, including Zayed National Museum and teamLab Phenomena in Abu Dhabi and the Lawh Wa Qalam: M. F. Husain Museum in Doha.
The Qatari capital will also host the inaugural Rubiya Qatar Quadrennial later this year, while Saudi Arabia will look to solidify its growing cultural influence with the third Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale and the fifth AlUla Arts Festival. These events signal the Gulf’s massive push to become a primary global art destination, leveraging star names like Rirkrit Tiravanija at Rubiya and Sara Abdu at AlUla to draw international visitors and diversify its economies through high-level cultural tourism.
Institutional momentum coalesces with a surge of commercial activity. Art Basel will make its Middle Eastern debut with Art Basel Qatar in February, while the inaugural Frieze Abu Dhabi will launch in November, positioned by its organizers as a “unique gateway to the region.” Regional staple Art Dubai, meanwhile, will also celebrate its 20th anniversary with its most expansive edition to date.
Major auction houses are growing and consolidating in the region, too. Following Sotheby’s landmark $17.28 million auction debut in Saudi Arabia last February and its $133 million Abu Dhabi Collectors Week sales in November, the house has officially scheduled the “Origins II” auction later this month in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, headlined by a $3 million Pablo Picasso work. Christie’s, meanwhile, is marking its 20th anniversary in the region by commencing the first full year of commercial operations in the Saudi capital.
2. Who will be this year’s biennale breakouts in the art market?
From the Whitney to West Africa, 2026 will be a banner year for biennales around the world. While Biennales are not strictly commercial, artists who generate buzz from these events often become highly sought after by galleries and collectors.
For instance, the 2024 Venice Biennale main exhibition, “Foreigners Everywhere,” emphasized artists outside the Western canon. It revived interest in previously overlooked artists such as Emmi Whitehorse, Ione Saldanha, and Olga de Amaral, all of whom have gone on to set auction records.
This year, several of the globe’s most influential biennales converge, most notably the 61st Venice Biennale, the 25th Biennale of Sydney, and the 82nd Whitney Biennial in New York, alongside editions in Bangkok, Malta, Lagos, and Diriyah. If there is a unified theme, it is a focus on intimacy and historical reclamation: Curators often highlight decolonial aesthetics and Indigenous sovereignty.
The most significant of these events is the Venice Biennale, which opens in May. Its main exhibition, “In Minor Keys,” was fully conceptualized by the late curator Koyo Kouoh, focusing on “low harmonies” and intimate displays. The artist list is expected to be released in February.
In Venice, the main exhibition is only the starting point: National pavilions, pop-up shows, and institutional showcases will unfold throughout the city, with several discoveries likely to emerge from these presentations. Announced highlights include Amar Kanwar at Palazzo Grassi, Lorna Simpson at Punta della Dogana, and Marina Abramović at Galleria dell’Accademia.
3. Doubling down on quality at auction
Last year, auction houses saw less speculation and more bidding aimed at artworks of historical endurance. As veteran auctioneer Jussi Pylkkänen wrote of the November season, “there was something of a ‘return to order’ as collectors competed for and consistently paid the highest prices for artists with established reputations.”
In 2026, expect bidders to continue favoring artists whose markets have already weathered multiple economic cycles and those with institutional validation. A cursory glance at confirmed lots at upcoming auctions seems to confirm this; a $30 million Canaletto painting at Christie’s Old Masters Sale in February should be among the year’s early highlights. Public auctions in 2026 will indeed double down on sales that center on art-historical stalwarts.
In an environment shaped by recent economic volatility, bidders tend to gravitate toward artists with well-established pricing benchmarks and perceived downside protection. Museum exhibitions, retrospectives, and strong provenance will remain key, with auction houses actively foregrounding these credentials to reinforce confidence and stimulate competition. While contemporary and emerging names will not disappear from auctions altogether, they may feature in more tightly curated offerings.
4. A more measured pace in the gallery sector
After a year in which several major galleries shuttered amid market volatility, many others are approaching 2026 as a period of consolidation and confidence-building. Collector attitudes have also grown more discerning: Some 30% of art collectors surveyed in Artsy’s Art Market Trends 2025 report said they’re being more selective with their purchases—a sentiment likely to persist into the year ahead.
With overheads remaining stubbornly high, galleries are increasingly adopting innovative and collaborative models to manage costs. Cross-gallery partnerships and shared spaces are set to further flourish, alongside expanded hybrid approaches that blend physical and digital platforms. Some 75% of galleries surveyed in Art Market Trends 2025 cited economic uncertainty as a major challenge, and 57% reported expanding online presence in response.
5. What does AI consolidation look like in the art market?
In 2025, Time magazine named the “architects of AI” its Person of the Year, noting that artificial intelligence’s “full potential roared into view” and that “there will be no turning back or opting out.”
The art market has reached a similar inflection point. The question is no longer whether AI is having an impact, but how extensively it should be embraced.
Debate around AI-generated art will remain lively as such works attract collector attention. The intensity of these opinions was evident last February, when Christie’s hosted its first all-AI art auction and faced widespread backlash from more than 6,000 artists who claimed in an open letter that AI models, “and the companies behind them, exploit human artists, using their work without permission or payment to build commercial AI products that compete with them.” Will we see more AI at auction houses and art fairs? Time will tell.
This year, copyright transparency may also come into sharper focus. The $1.5 billion settlement of Bartz v. Anthropic last September could help to set a precedent for remunerating artists whose works have been pirated by machine learning.
Operationally, AI adoption is also accelerating. Galleries are increasingly using AI tools for administrative tasks such as cataloguing, sales pitches, and registrarial work, while collectors deploy them for research and provenance checks. But don’t expect the technology to replace the role of the art advisor anytime soon.
from Artsy News https://ift.tt/Eq24yRJ
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